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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#1 |
Soaring
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http://www.spiegel.de/international/...560113,00.html
The innocence of climbing gas prices - and no debate about global warming even needed to make people change their minds. ![]()
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#2 | |
Rear Admiral
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#3 | ||
Ace of the Deep
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George W. ? ![]()
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#4 | |||
Rear Admiral
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And i bet someone on this site believes that aliens made Bush up the gas prices too, so maybe it could go both ways. -S |
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#5 |
Navy Seal
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How have the "GW alarmist crowd" raised gas prices?
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[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] |
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#6 | |
Rear Admiral
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#7 | ||
Ace of the Deep
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I don't know about the US of A, in Austria it really is like that, although it's a rather half-assed attempt, raising the taxes on fuel happens almost every year, when there's some hole to shut in the budget, and last year in the name of GW. But as far as I know there isn't nearly as much taxation on fuel in the US of A, and the price of a barrel of crude oil is much more of an influencing factor on the prices at the pump. And I think the prices of crude oil aren't influenced by the GW crowd but rather speculants lately. |
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#8 |
Lucky Jack
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GM has been a failing company for many years now. This looks to be like forward thinking were SUV and large pick up trucks will not be sold in any great numbers. With gas going up and it will stay were it is because they have seen we will pay these whacked prices, gas guzzlers will be a losing proposition for GM. Most of what they build is a losing proposition. I see GM dealships closing all the time because the are not big sellers on the market. Many years ago their quality went down hill and consumers began to notice. Specifically when Japanese cars hit our market. These cars lasted and ran like clock. GM has not been able to loose that stigmata of poor quality. There is a reason American car manufactures do comparison test with Japanese manufactures. They are still attempting to get the "quality product" back in their corner. I certainly will not purchase a GM product again.
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“You're painfully alive in a drugged and dying culture.” ― Richard Yates, Revolutionary Road |
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#9 | |
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If you need help on Americans, check the laws on drilling off our coasts, both in the Atlantic, and the Gulf, the ban on oil extractions from our tar sands, the ban on oil shale from Utah, the bans on drilling in Alaska, and the hurdles and general impossibility of opening coal to gasoline refineries due to possible GW!!! Crazy! We have 300 years of gasoline capability in this country, but we can't touch a single pint of it! All in the name of tree hugger alarmists. We have more gasoline capabilities withour own natural resources than dozens of Saudi Arabia's. Coal to gas alone could account for 250 years worth by itself. Sorry to harp on it, but I'm not real happy about it as you can see. -S |
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#10 |
Sea Lord
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I was curious about this oil shale junk so I did a little research.
Low end estimates put oil shale at about 1.5 trillion barrels, high end being 2.6. Being conservative and using the low end estimate (using 21 million barrels a day US consumption) gives just under 200 years of US domestic supply. Wowzas! Didn't know oil shale was that big a deal. I think profitability concerns for oil companies have just as much to do with the hesitancy to extract oil shale as treehugger's concerns do. They are going to wait until prices stay high long enough for this to be justified. PD |
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#11 | |
Lucky Jack
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I'm with Subman, drill the Gulf of Mexico....everyone else is!!!!
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#12 | ||
Ace of the Deep
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